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St. Johns Wood

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Aberdeen Place

St.Marylebone generating station long windowless facade which, as can be seen from letters on the far end ('ST.MA') is but a fragment of St Marylebone Borough's generating station (1906-1962). Both this and the nearby St John's Wood generating station were sited to use the canal for delivery of coal, removal of ashes and to provide cooling water.

St.John's Wood generating station

New housing, built 1979. Replaced flats built by the Great Central Railway (GCR) for people displaced by the building of Marylebone goods yard.

24 'Crocker's'was The Crown - also called Crocker's Folly. Late Victorian pub built in 1898 by Frank Crocker who hoped it would be opposite Marylebone Station - half mile out.  A lively free classical pub of 1898.  It is now named after its developer. Allegedly, Thomas Crocker thought the site was intended for the railway's passenger terminus, his 'folly' pub being built for the expected trade

Canal workers house

Flats a block of 1951 in the austerely progressive manner of the early post-war years: 

Alma Square

Battle of the 1850s

Heroes of Alma, wall of old track way

Ascham Street?

36 Kenby, manufacturing chemist, Idris & Co.

Blomfield Road

Browning Close

Canal

Canal from Paddington planned to go along the new road and keep the goods traffic off it. Metropolitan Line in fact goes under it. Thomas Homer wanted to build it to Limehouse and Rennie said ok and Nash said ok, go through the Park and look at the nice boats. It communicated with all the ornamental water in the Park.

East side of Lisson Grove Bridge.  The canal broadens and wharfs on the right bank where boats loaded and unloaded at the freight yards of the Marylebone railway. Alongside Westminster City Council's Lisson Green housing estate. The canal is wide enough for working boats to be moored on both sides.

Pad stones of bridges which used to carry railway sidings over the canal to goods yard

Walls supported by iron girders high above the Water.

Plan to build a restaurant but no.

Maida Hill Tunnel.  This goes under the Edgeware Road and is c 370 yards long and 26'9" wide. Water 4 ft deep with a roof 10ft above the water.  The Metre lengths are marked in white paint through it.  There was No towing path through the tunnel boats so boats were legged or poled through.  In 1855 there was skating through the tunnel in severe ice and Skaters whistled like trains as they went.  Designed by James Morgan, Engineer to the canal company.

Steep curving path which was the way horses crossing Maida Hill Tunnel to be reunited with their boats. The Horses had to go along over the tunnel at high level, cross Lisson Grove and return to the tow path down the cobbled path on the other side of the next bridge and then go back up to the tunnel mouth

Canal worker's house. Straddles the tunnel at the far end

CEGB 80 KV cable running along the tow path.  From the transformer station they run eastwards.

Modern sub-station occupies part of the site of St John's Wood generating station, built by Central Electricity Generating Co. 1904, and demolished 1972.

Site of premises of the Thames Bank Iron Company, which moved here in 1926 from a riverside site near Waterloo.

North bank past Tunnel St Marylebone stone yard with travelling crane to put stone in barges now a youth club. Victoria narrow boat there given by M&S in 1985 for 400 anniversary of City of Westminster

Tow path goes under Lisson Grove and house as a bridge

Handrail now because the roof of the bridge is horse height

Railway bridgescarrying lines from Marylebone. Similar to those removed, carried GCR main line trains to Marylebone from Nottingham, Sheffield and Manchester, but are now used only by local services.

Railway bridge for Metropolitan Line to Watford and Chesham; this section opened in 1868 as the Metropolitan & St John's Wood Railway.

Tunnel the tow path rises so that a horse could get over the top

Capland Street

Supposed to be haunted by children crying

Circus Road,

Start of Great British Circus, supposed to go all round St.John's Wood, mile in circumference, outer ring 66 yards, etc., 42 acres in the centre, Napoleonic war ended it, 1803

11 Princess Royal

Hospital of St.John and St.Elizabeth

Thompson

Clarendon Gardens

Clifton Gardens

9 Sir John Ambrose Fleming 1849-1945. Plaque says ‘dentist and electrical engineer lived here'. 

Clifton Road,

Cunningham Place,

Old track way on line of electricity narrow passage

17 plaque to Emily Davis grandmother f. Girton College, encouraged other women like Elizabeth Garratt-Anderson

10a villa, one of Landseer's houses,

18 formal terrace with taller centre and end houses unusually designed with big paterae.  An Arab stud for the architect J. W. Wild.

Housing cul de sacs of two- to four-storey housing Gollins Melvin Ward & Partners for Westminster.  They replaced the cramped flats of Wharncliffe Gardens built by the Great Central Railway for the population displaced from the line into Marylebone Station.

Edgeware Road

Original name was Maida Hill for the section north of the canal and also later Maida Hill East.

Middle level interceptor sewer beneath it

Hill House. Became Winchester Place and then Pine Apple Place. Housing built all round it in the 19th

18-20 Tyburn. Opened in the year 2000, and converted from a Whistlestop supermarket, this Wetherspoon's pub has a cafe-style design. The name refers to the notorious Tyburn Gate where public hangings took place in medieval London

63 Macaulay

Hero of MaidaInn. 1806. Stands near the canal bridge, which commemorates his name.  He hero was Major General Sir John Stuart who in 1806 won a battle against the French at Maida in southern Italy.

Elizabeth Close

Elm Tree Road

Built on the site of Oak Tree Field

17 Thomas Hood, poet, London County Council plaque

Elm Tree Mansions, Jacobs

Fairlop Place

Used to be Oak Tree Field.  1898 renamed for the Fairlop Oak.

Fisherton Street

Fisherton Estate H. V. Ashley and F. Winterton Newman for the borough.  1924

Francesca Street?

20 Spencer

31 Blyth

Garden Road

Added in 1820 in Greek revivalist style

Grove End Road

St.John's Wood Lane on old maps, track along side of farm at St.John's Wood Station, links Lisson Grove and Abbey Road Flats invaded the area from the beginning of the C 20

44 Greco-Egyptian additions to an older structure.  Flats.  Home of Tissot and Alma Tadema.  Garden colonnades

44a Greco-Egyptian additions to an older structure.  Was originally the covered, Entrance to the house.

Scott Ellis Gardens , 1903, built by the Howard de Walden estate to rehouse tenants from Portland Town.  

Grove End House dates from 1913,

4/16 studios

5 Cornwall

31 Sir Thomas Beecham

Hall Road

Site of Vale Court was the Pineapple Nursery 1793

Tollgate there north of Hall Road.  Pineapple tollgate.

1931 Cropthorne Court and Westmore Grove Frere Court 1935.

Vale Court is a 'modern bijou residences' Valley Court 1935.

Hamilton Court 1928

Grove Hall Court This was completed in 1936, and contains 200 flats. 

Hamilton Close

Line of old track

Hamilton Gardens

Byron statue

Dodds

Hamilton Road?

St Saviour's Almshouses

Hamilton Terrace

Harrow School Estate called after a school governor

1 Gould

17 Bazalgette

Joanna Southcott

St Mark

20 William Strang

63 Pinero

116Lush front garden full of dramatic foliage with a water feature and tree ferns. 

Hill Road

Lilestone Estate

Built in response to the bad conditions in Lisson Green and finished after the Second World War.  Mainly standard neo-Georgian blocks of between the wars estates, with plainer post-war additions. Landscaping and playground by Trevor Dannatt undertaken in the 1970s.

Lisson Grove

19 Florence Nightingale Hospital Institute for Sick Governess.  1850 Chandos Street.  Florence Nightingale Superintendent, 1853 in Harley Street.  Renamed Hospital for Gentlewomen in Illness, rebuilt in 1909 here.  Land is part of the Fitzroy Nuffield Hospital

Marylebone Grammar School was the old Philological College in 1792;

Sea Shell chip shop;

13 Leigh Hunt;

RC church of Our Lady built in 1836

Thames Bank Iron Co. 1926 from Waterloo on canal side

St. John's Wood generating station to CEGC 1904-1977 replaced by modern sub-station;

Upside down house on canal bank

Top by the railway commemorative stone about Lords Cricket Ground there in the 1930s

116 Benjamin Haydon Charles Rossi Bacon

Toll gate on junction with new road site of Philological School became St.Marylebone Grammar School

Lodge Road

Generating Station subdued with its angular wooden cooling towers, like a bizarre animal, Liverpool Architectural school singing swags and garlands, yellow brick, bloody great, Demolished

Lyons Place

Maida Hill Tunnel

Built by Pritchard and Hoof.  Begun 1812 as the first canal tunnel in London. Second longest after Islington.  Portman Estate would not allow them to go through their area so their had to be a diversion.

Maida Vale

Built mostly between 1830 and 1840, was formerly called Edgware Road, of which it is the continuation. In 1868 the Metropolitan Board of Works wanted to change the name to Kilburn Road but inhabitants petitioned for the name to be altered to Maida Vale. The road is about a mile long and runs from the Regent's Canal to Kilburn High Road.  It takes its name from Maida, a town in Calabria, Italy, where Sir John Stuart defeated the French in 1806 but the original name of Maida Hill is largely disused..  At the southern end it makes a slight curve, and from St. John's Wood Road to Hall Road, both sides are lined with blocks of flats, separated from the footpath by drives and gardens.

Cropthorne Court, comer of Hall Road, erected in 1931, includes a branch of the Westminster Bank by Sir Giles Scott, 

Clarendon Court. Had its own restaurant and theatre booking office. Became a hotel

Florence Court, erected in 1935

Vale Court, corner of Hall Road

Row of modern bijou residences.

Wellesley Court, an extensive block of flats completed in 1935.  This stands back in a private carriage drive and has a frontage to Abercorn Place. by Frank Scarlett, 1936. 1930s designs seem subtle in comparison with the mediocre insertions,

Hamilton Court, block of flats, completed in 1938, which also has a second frontage to Elgin Avenue. by Beresford Mars

Maida Vale Hospital for Nervous diseases. Founded in 1866 for epilepsy and paralysis and became part of the National Hospital, Queen's Square. 84 beds. The first hospital to identify and operate on a brain tumour.

9 Clifton Gardens, Ambrose Fleming

23 Potter

108 Amis

134 Symons

136 William Friese-Greene – the inventor of cine film. 1855-1921. 

140 Islamic Centre of England. Opened 1998.

Maida Vale Studios on the site of a skating rink. BBC studios for the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Used for Radio 1 live music sessions and especially by John Peel.

Melina Place,

Part of old track way goes along the garden walls

Villas remain

3 Toynbee

4 Colman

5 Machen

North Bank

1813 Built by Burton/for prosperous tradesmen

21 Lewes

36 Mary Shelley

41 Huxley

Northwick Terrace

Christ Church Chapel

7 Hewlett

Oak Tree Road

Pineapple Place?

Romney

Randolph Mews

Supply stationone of the 'Metropolitan Electric Supply Company's sub-stations remains. Built 1927, now disused. See initials in brickwork.

Randolph Road

10 Tiennel 1853-1909

Covers in the pavement are marked 'Metropolitan Electric Supply Ltd'.

Railway

Lords tunnel 1898. No ventilation but an internal bridge sat St John’s Wood Road

Robert Close

Rossmore Road

St.Paul's Bentinck School

Scott Ellis Gardens

Part of the Harley estate, 1966 T.Scott sold it to Harley

St John's Wood New Town.

Site of St. John's Farm pulled down i1830 and was a part of the Forest of Middlesex. Name from the Priors of St. John of Jerusalem.

St. John's Wood

Was given by the Priors of the area who owned it Babbington lived there.

Royal Archaeological Institute

St.John's Wood Road,

Laid out 1819 on the Eyre Estate

1 Landseer lived may have been Punkers Barn

Lord's Cricket Ground.  Here are played in June and July the Eton and Harrow, Oxford and Cambridge, and other great matches. The site was the area of duck pond for Punkers Barn. The Middlesex Cricket Club, moved here in 1814, having started at White Conduit.  Moved in nineteenth century from Dorset Square. In 1968 it became a wider body. The canal affects the site and the surface is levelled with spoil from Maida Hill tunnel.  . Main entrance designed by Herbert Baker as a memorial to W.G.Grace.  Above the central pillar are stumps and bails with a bat and a ball and a lion.  

Members' Pavilion. Listed grade II* and dates from 1889-90. It was fully refurbished and extended in 2005 by the architects Ettwein Bridges. This included a new roof terrace and restored viewing turrets. Built in terra cotta. There is a Cricket memorial gallery, with the ashes and memorials to cricketers 1865 - A fascinating collection of trophies, pictures, and everything to do with cricket.  .It followed an Appeal for a museum, and until 1953 it was in the members' pavilion

Mound Stand, Michael Hopkins and Partners. .

Lex Brookland garage, the most noticeable building with a pair of unusually elegant sheds with tinted glass end wall

Lord’s Tavern

Lord’s Station 1868-1939 south side at junction with Park Road

Clergy Orphan Schools

Thames Aqueducts.  Ring main passes under here. Started from in 1960 but it Had been suggested in 1935 – a  tunnel to take water from the Thames above Teddington to North London.  It is built in 102in diameter tunnel in interlocking concrete rings for 19 miles, starts at Hampton Water Works and finishes at the Lockwood reservoir.  Built by Sir William Halcrow & Partners.

Warrington Crescent

Corner with Clifton Gardens

St.Saviour's Gothic church, Bomb damage

19 Davidson

43 Payn

75 David Ben Gurion 1886-1973.  Plaque says  'first Prime Minister of Israel, lived here’. 

93 Warrington Hotel

Warwick Avenue

The street dates from the 1840s, but it was so called in honour of one Jane Warwick of Warwick Hall in Cumberland who married the heir to an estate here in 1778. 

Warwick Avenue Station.. 31st January 1915. Between Maida Vale and Paddington on the Bakerloo Line. On the Bakerloo Line, an  intermediate station on the extension to Willesden. at the junction of Warwick Avenue, Warrington Crescent and Clifton Gardens. For a time prior to its opening, the proposed name for the station was’Warrington Crescent’.  

Cabmen's shelter. One of 12 surviving shelters and mess rooms for London taximen. The first was erected in 1875 by a hackney carriage user who took pity on the cabmen working in all weathers; by 1915 there were 65.

Clifton Nursery. A small up-market gardening centre - 

6 Jerrold

Warwick Road Station,

From Paddington 1915

Wellington Place

Wellington hospital

10 MacNeice

Wharncliffe Gardens

Estate on site of flats to rehouse people from Marylebone route.  a large railway  housing estate of 580 dwellings built by the Manchester Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway c.1895.  It is a Westminster Council estate now.



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